WDCC Disney Classics Snow White And The Seven Dwarfs Heigh Ho From The Disney Movie Snow White
Status: Out Of Stock | Condition: New | Edition:Snow White | Edition Size: Limited Edition | Dim: | WDCC Disney Classics| Item #: 4010347
Price: $ 0.00 USD..
SOLD!
Click Below to be notified once WDCC Disney Classics Snow White And The Seven Dwarfs Heigh Ho
is back in stock
Notify me!
Get Your Cost for International Delivery.
- 🇦🇺
- 🇦🇹
- 🇩🇰
- 🇫🇮
- 🇫🇷
- 🇩🇪
- 🇮🇪
- 🇮🇹
- 🇯🇵
- 🇳🇱
- 🇳🇴
- 🇪🇸
- 🇸🇪
- 🇨🇭
- 🇬🇧
No Sales Tax Except In The State Of Florida.
Snow White and The Seven Dwarfs Heigh-Ho! Heigh-Ho! It’s Home from Work We Go! - 4010347
NOTES: The Dwarfs marching across the log is the Ninth (9th) release in the Signature Series.
Plussed with eighteen (18) pieces of pewter for tree roots, six (6) pieces of pewter for pick axes, brass wire lamp handle, one (1) piece glass frame two (2) pieces on the tops of trees are resin.
A Numbered Limited Edition (NLE) of 750.
One interesting thing to note is the color application -- the sunlight is hitting one side of the Dwarfs and log in the film so the paint technique fired onto the sculpture recreates this shading.
This year's Signature Series release was sculpted by Patrick Romandy-Simmons who also sculpted the First (1st) Signature Series release in 2000, the Numbered Limited Edition (NLE) of 1,937 Soup's On (the lost moment) also from Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs..
Snow White And The Seven Dwarfs Heigh Ho by WDCC Disney Classics
image Copyright © 2024 by WDCC Disney Classics
Gift Card Purchase
E-Gift Cards from The Collection Shop are the perfect way to gift art enthusiasts. Click below for more details!
WDCC Disney Classics bio
WALT DISNEY CLASSICS FIGURINES - The Classics Collection started in 1992 with three scenes, Bambi, Cinderella, and Fantasia's Sorcerer Apprentice. Many other series have since been introduced. Some figurines are limited, and some have been retired. Some of these figurines have risen high on the secondary market. The figurines are made of porcelain, and the process is similar to that use to make Hummel figurines. Individual pieces are molded, put together, and fired in an oven. Then they are painted and fired again. Each figurine is marked on the bottom, signifying the year it was produced. The marks represent significant milestones in Disney history. The figurines with the first year mark are usually the most desirable.